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May 17, 2010
This week's themeWhose what? This week's words Ockham's razor Morton's fork Hobson's choice Achilles' heel St. Elmo's fire
William of Ockham
Section of a stained glass window at a church in Surrey, UK
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with Anu GargOur language is sprinkled with terms coined with the formula X's Y. There's baker's dozen and bull's eye and deadman's hand (a poker hand). There are diseases and syndromes and body parts named after physicians (Parkinson's disease); there are theorems, laws, and numbers named after scientists (Avogadro's number); there are plants named after botanists (Ahnfelt's seaweed); and there are places named after explorers, though some are named after no one ("no man's land" :-). This week we'll look at five terms that follow this X's Y or "someone's something" formula, terms named after specific people that answer: Whose what? Ockham's razor or Occam's razor
PRONUNCIATION:
(OK-ehmz RAY-zuhr)
MEANING:
noun:
The maxim that the simplest of explanations is more likely to be correct than any other.
ETYMOLOGY:
After William of Ockham (c. 1288-1348), a logician and theologian, who is
credited with the idea.
NOTES:
Ockham's razor states that "entities should not be multiplied
needlessly". It's also called the principle of parsimony. It's the idea that
other things being equal, between two theories the simpler one is preferable.
Why razor? Because Ockham's razor shaves away unnecessary assumptions.
Ockham's razor has applications in fields as diverse as medicine, religion,
crime, and literature. Medical students are told, for example, "When you
hear hoofbeats, think horses, not zebras."
USAGE:
"But not everyone in Washington is a believer in Occam's razor, so all
manner of other theories flourished."A DC Whodunit: Who Leaked And Why?; Reuters (UK); Sep 22, 2009. See more usage examples of Ockham's razor in Vocabulary.com's dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Sometimes I wish I were a little kid again; skinned knees are easier to fix than broken hearts. -Anonymous
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